snow drifted undisturbed against the cabin, but it was gone from in front of the door. Meaning someone was inside, or nearby. only, no one would willingly leave shelter in such a storm. nor put out his fire, either, unless he was trying to hide his presence.
Byrne shouted a warning as the first crossbows sounded from the surrounding woods. The soldiers on the ground looked up in surprise. Some of them fell where they stood, their black blood steaming as it splattered into the snow. A few managed to scramble back onto their horses, spurring them into the trees, wrestling weapons out of their saddle boots, struggling with gloved hands to string their bows. But not many.
raisa sat frozen, watching all this as if it were a drama and she a spectator, until Byrne pushed her head down with his gloved hand. “Lie flat and follow me!” he growled, demonstrating by leaning close into his horse’s neck and slamming his heels into the gelding’s sides. They twisted and turned as they crossed the clearing, Byrne leading the way. raisa flinched as something whined close to her ear, burning the skin at the back of her neck. She pressed her face into Switcher’s neck, her heart clamoring in fear.
As they reached the first of the trees, a large shape materialized out of the swirling flakes, a man on foot swinging a great sword. Switcher screamed and reared back, and the blade missed taking off raisa’s head and bit into the mare’s shoulder. raisa 51
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caught a glimpse of a grinning, bearded face as the man reached for her, grabbing a fistful of cloak.
Their eyes met, and a look of startled recognition passed across the man’s scar-puckered face. He looked oddly familiar to raisa, too.
There was no time to dwell on it. raisa twisted Switcher’s head around, stood in her stirrups and slammed her boot into the attacker’s chin. His head snapped back and he disappeared from view as they charged on into the darkness.
The sounds of fighting faded behind them, but Byrne pushed the exhausted horses forward relentlessly. The wind howled, and the swirling flakes reduced the world around them to the space of a few yards, broken by the gray skeletons of trees. off to the left and right, raisa could see gray bodies loping through the trees, easily keeping pace with them. So they were still in grave danger.
raisa prayed. “Sweet Lady in chains, deliver us,” she whispered. it was odd how an attempt on her life could snap her out of her funk.
The weather was a blessing and a curse. it fought them every step of the way, yet between the wind and snow, all traces of their trail would be obliterated within moments of their passing. As the snow deepened, their forward progress slowed as the horses plunged forward through mammoth drifts. Switcher plowed along behind Byrne’s gelding, her head at the other horse’s flank.
Finally, Switcher’s slow plodding stopped. raisa straightened and pushed back her hood. Byrne had reined in. He peered into the darkness on all sides, listening with his head cocked. Finally he nodded as if satisfied, and turned off the invisible trail into the 52
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deep snow to the left, floundering through drifts that were chest high on the horses in some places.
They ended in a grove of snow-covered pines whose weeping branches brushed the ground on all sides. Byrne dismounted on the lee side of one of the great trees and motioned for raisa to do the same. Sliding her travel bag over her shoulder, she attempted to do so, but found her frozen limbs would no longer obey her commands. Murmuring an apology, Byrne slid his gauntleted arms under her and lifted her off her horse. Using his shoulder, he bulled his way through the drooping branches and into the shelter of the tree.
There, in the pine-scented darkness, it seemed almost temper-ate, the unrelenting shriek of the wind muted by thick branches with their layering of snow. Byrne set raisa down on a
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